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Community News

The Buncombe County COVID-19 Weekly Update: Low Community Level & updated boosters

November 23, 2022 by Richard Needleman

 

ASHEVILLE, NC – November 23, 2022 – The CDC reports that the community level for Buncombe County is low for the week ending November 14th. Most of the counties in North Carolina are low and none are at a high community level. Most of the counties in the U.S. are at a low level with less than 3% of the counties at a high level. For a county at a low community level, the CDC recommends:

  • You may choose to wear a mask at any time as an additional precaution to protect yourself and others.
  • If you are at high risk for severe illness, consider wearing a mask in a public indoors space and take additional precautions.

The Buncombe County COVID-19 metrics are on the North Carolina COVID Dashboard. Data from the week ending on November 12th indicate:

  • The data from the last 2 weeks is incomplete. With the best available data, last week’s total cases are 190 down 18% from 233 the previous week.
  • 67% of the total population have received their primary vaccination series. Unchanged over the past 14 weeks.
  • 24% of people with their primary vaccination series have had the new bivalent booster up 1% from last week.
  • The seven-day daily average of COVID-19 hospitalizations is 44 and has increased by 1 since last week, and of ICU patients is 4 and has decreased by 1 from the previous week.

The Department of Health and Human Services recommends:

  • Stay up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccines and boosters.
  • People with any COVID symptoms should get tested
  • People who are positive for COVID-19 or do not feel well should stay home

Vaccination sites and testing sites can be located through the North Carolina and Buncombe County Department of Health and Human Services.

An updated COVID-19 booster is now available for eligible persons 5 years and older. This new booster targets 2 versions of the COVID virus, the original virus and the new dominant BA.4 and BA.5 variants. Eligible persons must be at least 2 months after any prior COVID-19 shots and have had the primary vaccination series. The CDC advises that people who recently had COVID consider delaying their boosters until 3 months after their symptoms started or 3 months after a positive COVID test if they were asymptomatic. The updated booster shot is available at the Department of Public Health Coxe Avenue vaccination clinic, pharmacies, community health centers and rural health clinics.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/COVID-update_11.23.22.mp3

 

Contact: Dr. Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

Author and podcaster, Christy Alexander Hallberg, on her book, Searching for Jimmy Page, her writing process, rock novels, and the definition of “rock” music.

November 21, 2022 by Patricia Furnish

Christy Alexander Hallberg is the author of the award-winning novel ‘Searching For Jimmy Page’, from Livingston Press.

She is also the host of Rock is Lit: A Podcast About Rock Novels, from Pantheon Podcast Network.

Her short fiction, creative nonfiction, book reviews, and interviews have appeared or are forthcoming in such journals as ‘North Carolina Literary Review’, ‘storySouth’, ‘Still: The Journal’, ‘Main Street Rag’, ‘Fiction Southeast’, ‘Riggwelter’, ‘Deep South Magazine’, ‘Eclectica’, ‘Litro’, ‘STORGY Magazine’, ‘Entropy’, and ‘Concho River Review’.

Her creative nonfiction essay “The Ballad of Evermore” was a finalist for the ‘Sequestrum’ 2020 Editor’s Reprint Award. Her flash story “Aperture” was chosen Story of the Month by ‘Fiction Southeast’ for October 2020, and selected by the editors of the Best Small Fictions anthology series for inclusion in the 2021 edition.

She teaches literature and writing online at East Carolina University, where she earned her BS and MA in English. She received her MFA in Creative Writing (Fiction) from Goddard College. In addition to teaching, Christy serves as Senior Associate Editor of ‘North Carolina Literary Review’. She is a former editor of #FridayFlash USA at ‘Litro’ magazine.

A native of eastern North Carolina, she now lives in the western part of the state on the outskirts of Asheville, near the Great Smoky Mountains.

Host of Rock is Lit podcast

Author of novel ‘Searching for Jimmy Page’

Senior Associate Editor of ‘North Carolina Literary Review’

Website: www.christyalexanderhallberg.com


More Posts for Show: Southern Reckoning

Filed Under: Community News, Show Posts

DIYabled Holiday Fair Market

November 18, 2022 by Jess Speer

Open call for anyone in Asheville that makes art, crafts, food, and more!!!!
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DIYabled is very excited to work with West Asheville’s newest community space, Different Wrld, for the Holiday Fair Market.
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Everyone is welcome, including disabled people. Different Wrld is ADA compliant and can accommodate you. Please email [email protected] or DM @diyabled on Instagram to get specific information about what your accommodations are.
================
The event will be on November 30th from 5-8 PM at Different Wrld, 701 Haywood Rd. Vendors will be charged $5-$10 to pay for the promotion of this event. Stay tuned for more details as this becomes a fantastic community event.

Filed Under: Community News

Asheville FM Seeks Board Members

November 18, 2022 by KP Whaley

We are pleased to announce that 103.3 Asheville FM is looking for members of our community to serve as Board members to guide our vision and fulfill our inclusive and progressive mission. The Mission of Asheville FM is to keep Asheville thriving by producing diverse and eclectic programming that inspires our listeners to build connections across our communities and to discover new music and ideas. We do this by producing diverse, insightful and relevant news, talk, sports and music programming.

Board members attend meetings (6 per year) and serve on a committee and participate in fundraising, with the primary responsibility of providing leadership, vision and direction. Board members also develop and recruit volunteer leaders, oversee and procure financial resources, support our general manager, staff and volunteers; and ensure that programming achieves AFM’s mission.Asheville FM is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation.

Being on the board of Asheville FM is rewarding in so many ways! And fun! In addition to helping guide an important community resource, you will be making connections with other volunteers in our family and the Asheville community in general, and also learning about how local community radio serves the Asheville area. Asheville FM is a vibrant organization, our station is solvent and growing; and we need intelligent, passionate leaders to help shape our future.

Board members also attend our casual station get-togethers and other functions and get to know the members of our extended family.

Please consider a seat on our Board today! We would love the opportunity to share our future plans with you. Please send your email of interest to [email protected], and we will send you a short application.

Thank you for your consideration!

-kp

Filed Under: Community News, Station News

Our health care system is responsible for significant greenhouse gas emissions that can harm your health

November 17, 2022 by Richard Needleman

 

WASHINGTON, DC – November 6, 2022 – Health care is on the front line of the climate crisis, both as an upstream aggravator and a downstream healer. According to the White House, the U.S. healthcare sector is responsible for about 8.5 percent of all greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions which contribute significantly to the climate crisis and many public health problems. Climate change can cause or worsen asthma, allergies, heart disease, mental health, malnutrition, lung cancer, and waterborne and vector-borne illnesses. Extreme weather events can disrupt health care access, delivery and supply chains. Health disparities due to race, ethnicity and low resources are worsened.

On Earth Day, April 22, 2022, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the White House issued a call to action for the health care sector to help fix the climate crisis. Federal health systems (like the Veterans Health Administration) and many leading health systems across the country are already taking action to reduce their GHG emissions. HHS asked health care institutions to sign a Health Care System Climate (HCSC) Pledge, to reduce emissions and to protect their communities from a changing climate. On June 30, the Biden-Harris administration announced that 61 of the largest U.S. hospital and health sector companies have signed the pledge. Of this group, Atrium Health has hospitals and medical schools in North Carolina; DaVita has kidney dialysis centers in western North Carolina.

In order to preserve a livable earth and reduce the environmental impacts of climate change, the average global temperature will need to be held to 1.5oC (2.7oF) above the pre-industrial levels of the late 1800’s. Currently, our planet is 1.1oC (2.0oF) warmer and GHG emissions continue to rise, perpetuating the problem. For a livable climate, these emissions will need to be net zero (according to the United Nations), when atmospheric emissions are completely absorbed naturally by the oceans and forests. The Paris Agreement of 2015, signed by 193 countries and the European Union, recommends that GHG emissions be reduced to 45% of 2010 levels by 2030 and approach net zero by 2050.

The HCSC pledge asks each hospital and health system to:

  • Reduce GHG emissions to 50% of 2008 levels by 2030 and be carbon neutral by 2050
  • Designate an executive-level sustainability leader and develop a climate resilience plan for their facilities and community by the end of 2023
  • Conduct an inventory of indirect emissions by the end of 2024

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Health-sector-sustainability3_11.16.22.mp3

 

Contact: Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

What is respiratory syncytial virus?

November 17, 2022 by Richard Needleman

 

ASHEVILLE, NC – November 7, 2022 – This is the time of year, during the colder fall, winter and spring months, for the spread of seasonal viral respiratory diseases like the flu. These illnesses are contagious and spread in the air. The respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) has been around for years, although it hasn’t been as common as the flu. Babies and children 2 years old and younger can be affected. The virus can cause the lungs and the airways to become inflamed and for pneumonia to develop in severe cases. There is a higher rate of hospitalization than for flu or even COVID-19. Older persons and those that have weakened immune systems can also become severely ill.

RSV is a global disease that is surging earlier this year in much of the United States. In many states (like Michigan), the health care system is now under severe stress due to the large number of hospital admissions, ICU admissions and staff shortages. Some of the most common symptoms of RSV are like the common cold with fever and runny nose. Worsening of the disease can be associated with loss of appetite, coughing, sneezing and wheezing. Those with trouble breathing require immediate hospital care. Sometimes, this disease can be fatal.

Wearing face masks and frequent hand-sanitation have helped to reduce the spread of COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses over the past few years. As a result, many young children have not been exposed to RSV and, therefore, have no immunity to it. Many people have stopped using these precautions due to the lessening of the COVID-19 problem, contributing to the early spread of respiratory illnesses like RSV. The Mission Hospital Pediatric Emergency Department reports that the current volume of cases is already equal to the usual winter surge. Data from the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Dashboard have reported more than a 1800% jump in Type A influenza cases in the past month. However, there is limited RSV-specific data on the N.C. dashboard.

The risk of acquiring severe viral respiratory diseases can be reduced through wearing a face mask when indoors, frequent hand washing and staying away from crowded indoor public spaces. The FDA has not approved any vaccine for RSV. However, Pfizer is planning to submit the results of their recently successful phase three trial by the end of the year.

 

Listen to the full report below:

 

https://ashevillefm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/RSV_11.16.22.mp3

 

Contact: Dr. Dick Needleman, Health reporter, 103.3 AshevilleFM, [email protected]


More Posts for Show: Asheville FM News Hour

Filed Under: Community News

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